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The gene responsible for autosomal dominant, fully penetrant, nonsyndromic sensorineural progressive hearing loss in a large Costa Rican kindred was previously localized to chromosome 5q31 and named DFNA1 . Deafness in the family is associated with a protein-truncating mutation in a human homolog of the Drosophila gene diaphanous . The truncation is caused by a single nucleotide substitution in a splice donor, leading to a four–base pair insertion in messenger RNA and a frameshift. The diaphanous protein is a profilin ligand and target of Rho that regulates polymerization of actin, the major component of the cytoskeleton of hair cells of the inner ear.
Lynch et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
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